Hundreds of stray dogs poisoned in Karachi to curb attacks

Bodies of dead dogs littered areas of karachi where municipal workers gathered them for disposal.

A municipal worker unloads the bodies of stray dogs from a garbage truck after they were culled using poison by the municipality in Karachi on Thursday.(Reuters)

Officials have poisoned hundreds of dogs in the southern Pakistani city of Karachi in the latest effort to curb a population of strays that attack thousands of people each year in the teeming mega-city of some 20 million

Bodies of dead dogs littered areas of the city where municipal workers gathered them for disposal.

“At least 700 dogs have been killed only in two areas of Karachi’s south in the last couple of days,” said Sattar Javed, a spokesperson for the municipal authority.

The carcasses of dead dogs are collected after they were culled using poison by the municipality in Karachi.
(Reuters)

Officials estimated the citywide operation that started this week had culled thousands of strays but did not have a full accounting for all six city districts.

The periodic culling of dogs using poison tablets hidden in chicken meat has drawn criticism from animal rights activists in Pakistan, but another city official, Mohammad Zahid, said it was necessary because packs of strays posed a threat to residents.

Children react as they ride a bicycle past the carcasses of dead dogs.
(Reuters)

Last year, Karachi’s Jinnah Hospital treated 6,500 people bitten by dogs and this year so far it has seen 3,700 cases, said Dr Seemin Jamali, head of the emergency room.